CHARLESTON, W.Va – A Charleston teenager will spend the rest of his life in prison, with the possibility of parole, after being sentenced for the murder of tobacco store clerk Caden Martin.

Barack Williams, 15, received the automatic sentence of life in prison with mercy, meaning he will be resentenced when he turns 18 and is eligible for parole in 15 years, at a hearing before Kanawha County Circuit Judge Maryclaire Akers on Wednesday.

Williams served as the lookout for a robbery that led to Martin being killed and, under West Virginia state law, was found liable as a result.

The hearing began with a statement from assistant prosecuting attorney Madison Tuck, who described statements Williams made to deputies at the Kanawha County Judicial Complex during the trial, including derogatory comments about Martin, expressing his desire to desecrate Martin’s grave. and stating he plays the video game Grand Theft Auto V “in real life.”

In handing down the sentence, Judge Akers castigated those comments.

“You got convicted of it and immediately turned around and said that what you were looking forward to when you were released was desecrating the victim’s grave. Those are monstrous words. It’s a monstrous mindset,” she said.

Victim impact statements read during the hearing came from Martin’s mother, Jessica Boyce, as well as his grandmothers, Sandi Cedeno and Jill Martin. Boyce described the feeling Williams’ actions left her family with.

“No sentence today can bring Caden home. No punishment can undo the hole this person blew through our lives, but I pray that the court sees this for what it is: a deliberate, calculated act that stole a young man’s future and destroyed our family forever,” she said.

She also turned her attention toward Williams himself.

“You will never be as good as Caden was, not in this lifetime, not ever. At the age of 19, my son had already become more man than you will ever be, so when you sit here and try to act tough, remember this: you are nothing compared to Caden,” she said.

In her statement, Cedeno evoked the emotions that came with Martin’s death and the trauma she still deals with today.

“Every morning I wake up, my first thought is of Caden, and the same when I go to bed. I can’t concentrate at work. I have no joy in my life. I feel empty inside. All I can do now is deal with the constant silent scream inside of me,” she said.

Jill Martin called back to the night of her grandson’s death and a key part of the prosecution’s case. Evidence showed Williams stole ice cream bars from the store where Caden Martin was shot and that Williams returned home and ate them later that night.

“Caden was an amazing human being. He did not deserve to be gunned down. It is sickening to think of this teenager stealing ice cream while Caden was scared for his life,” she said.

After the impact statements, Williams’ attorney, Herb Hively, spoke on his behalf, describing a possible future where his client could take advantage of educational opportunities while in prison.

Williams then gave a statement of his own and continued to maintain that he had no awareness of what his co-defendant, Bre’juan Williams-Hampton, intended to do during the robbery that turned deadly.

Judge Akers addressed Williams directly before imposing the sentence.

“That was possibly not the worst thing I’ve ever heard a defendant say, but it was close,” she said.

Bre’juan Williams-Hamption pleaded guilty and received the same sentence last year.